The Austro-Polish Solution to the Polish Problem During the First World War
Abstract
The Austro-Polish solution was a program, one of several, which the statesmen of the two central empires, Austria-Hungary and Germany, considered and studied as a possible means of resolving the problem of Poland. This problem had come to the fore in the first world war because it was the first time since 1815, when the Congress of Vienna had confirmed the three late eight- eenth century partitions of Poland, that the three partitioning powers Russia, Austria, and Prussia - were divided on opposite sides in a major war.
Subject Area
European history|International Relations|Military history
Recommended Citation
Liggio, Leonard Paul, "The Austro-Polish Solution to the Polish Problem During the First World War" (1959). ETD Collection for Fordham University. AAI28623377.
https://research.library.fordham.edu/dissertations/AAI28623377